The new services that opioid treatment programs have adopted in response to COVID-19

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsat.2021.108393Get rights and content

Highlights

  • Opioid Treatment Programs (OTPs) have changed their treatment approaches due to COVID-19.

  • Most of OTPs screen for COVID-19 and implement social distancing measures.

  • OTPs in states with shelter in place laws are more likely to socially distance.

  • More than half of OTPs offer telehealth and curbside treatment.

  • Few offer medication drop off or pick up by trusted person for patients in isolation due to COVID-19.

Abstract

COVID-19 has exacerbated the opioid epidemic and transformed how programs treat opioid use disorder. In response to the pandemic, the federal government modified guidelines to allow opioid treatment programs (OTPs) greater flexibility in the provision of medication for opioid use disorder. We conducted a telephone survey of 31.10% of OTPs in the contiguous United States between June and July 2020. We contacted a random sample of 477 facilities and obtained responses from 373. The survey asked questions about new patient intake, screening for COVID-19, social distancing measures, as well as new treatments offered due to changes in federal government policy. We calculated percentages of positive and nonpositive responses to each survey question. We estimated logistic regressions of facility-, county- and state-level predictors of each treatment approach. Most OTPs are taking new patients (91%). Roughly 83% of them screen for COVID-19 symptoms for in-person visits and about 92% use social distancing measures. More than half of OTPs provide curbside treatment (83%) or telehealth (81%). Less than a quarter of OTPs offer medication drop off (21%) or pick up by a trusted person (32%) when patients need to quarantine due to COVID-19. Results from multivariable logistic regressions show that OTPs in states that had a shelter-in-place policy are more likely to socially distance for in-person visits than those in states without such a policy.

Keywords

Opioid treatment programs
Opioid use disorder
COVID-19
Social distancing
Telehealth

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